Corrine Crabtree has built a business starting from charging $5.95 for her weight loss membership to now making 8 figures a year in her business. Find out today what she thinks the reasons are for her business success.
Listen in today to learn:
- The hardest decision Corrine ever made for her business
- Why she lost half of her members because of a decision she made
- How she learned to value herself
- What she believes causes burnout in business owners
To find out more about Corrine's weight loss program, visit: https://phit-n-phat.com/
If you'd like to find out more about how to use Human Design practically in your business, signup for the FLOW workshop here: https://rebeccatervo.com/flow
Rebecca:
So I am super excited to have today's guest on the podcast and I wanted to
say that this feels like a full circle moment for me because I met Corrine,
and she doesn't know this about me, but back in 2016, when I quit my job, I
found The Life Coach School podcast, and I started diligently listening. I
listened to every episode, I binged it, in fact. It was so amazing for
helping me find my next thing. I was really into self-growth anyways and it
was a very good self-growth podcast. I joined Self Coaching Scholars in
2017, and Corrine was one of the teachers of Self Coaching Scholars. I just
loved the way that she had a no BS attitude about things and just the way
she came off, she just feels like your girlfriend right away. It just felt
like even though I never really had a lot of deep conversations with her, I
don't even think I've ever really been coached by her on a call that I can
never remember, but I watched so many calls.
Rebecca:
I listened to the episode she was on Brooke's Life Coach School Podcast in
2017, there was one episode where Brooke was talking to coaches who had
been really successful already, financially successful in their businesses,
and Corrine was one of the guests on that podcast and I had that podcast on
replay. I listened to it over and over and over again.
Rebecca:
In 2017, it was really inspiring to me because I had left my job in 2016
and I was still in this phase of trying to figure out what was next for
myself. What was I going to do? I knew, even though at the time I had been
kind of dabbling in this online accounting-type of business for nonprofits,
I was just dabbling because it didn't feel right. It didn't feel like what
I really wanted to do, even though I was really good at it. I felt like I
had a lot of knowledge there and I could offer value, my heart and my soul
wasn't in it. In 2017, I was really considering I want to go be a life
coach and I want to, for some reason, this feels like something I need to
do. I had lost my son to suicide in 2012, so this was already five years
later. I felt like he had come a long way and I knew that there was
something more that I wanted to do to help with other women who are
struggling with things in their lives. I just didn't know the direction it
was going to take, but the Life Coach School was so significant in me
figuring out what to do next.
Rebecca:
I did end up graduating from the Life Coach School as a certified life
coach and Corrine along the way, without her even knowing it, has been just
a huge inspiration to me for what is possible in business. Corrine came
from a place of charging $5.95 cents for a weight loss membership to now
making eight figures a year in her business. She has had tremendous
success, not only in weight loss, but in business and making money. I just
find her take on things so valuable, so I am so excited today to have
Corrine, I feel like we're back to a full circle moment, like I said, and
it's just super fun to introduce her. I was kind of fangirling it before I
got on the call and I just had to kind of calm myself down and take a deep
breath and think, "You know what? It's okay. I can just show up as myself
and it's all going to be fun and good, and we'll have a great
conversation." It's just like I was meeting some kind of movie star or
something, that's how I felt when Corrine agreed to come on my podcast. I'm
super excited to introduce you to Corrine, so let's get to the episode.
Rebecca:
Welcome to Beautifully Bloomed, the podcast where we explore how to break
you out of the box of rules and beliefs that are holding you back from the
life you're meant to live. I'm your host, Rebecca Tervo. Join me as I share
mindset tools, coaching conversations, and human design to help you uncover
your unique gifts and create the life relationships and business you
desire.
Rebecca:
Corrine Crabtree is a master certified life coach with a mission to help
every woman lose weight and live the exact life they want. Corrine lost 100
pounds 15 years ago and ever since she has dedicated her life to teaching
women how to do the same. She is the host of the wildly successful podcast,
Losing 100 Pounds with Corrine, which has been downloaded over 32 million
times in 160 countries. Over 500,000 women have taken Corrine's free course
that teaches four basics to easily transform their weight loss and lives
forever. Corrine serves over 10,000 women from all over the US and the
world every day in her private online no BS weight loss program. I am so
excited today to introduce you to Corrine Crabtree.
Rebecca:
Hi, Corinne, welcome to the podcast. I'm so excited to have you here today.
Corrine:
Well, I'm excited to be here with you.
Rebecca:
Thank you. I just have to say before we get started that I met you through
the Life Coach School and I just was such a fan because I listened to that
one episode from 2017, you were on Brooke's podcast and I listened to it
over and over and over again. It was the one about how to make $100,000 but
it was just so good. Do people tell you that, they listened to it over and
over again or is it just me?
Corrine:
I have appeared on Brooke's podcast, I think three or four times now and it
just depends on which episode, but I will say this, I have a tendency to
cry on podcasts or spill my gut on a podcast and people are just like,
"You're my girl now."
Rebecca:
Yes.
Corrine:
Yeah.
Rebecca:
You had this one thing you said, it said, "I have a love affair with
electricity and water," and I just found that so funny.
Corrine:
This is very true. I still have that same love affair.
Rebecca:
Right. We need to charge for services because we need to keep our lights
on. Right?
Corrine:
Right, right.
Rebecca:
I love that. Some of the things I've learned from you is about self worth
and value. You had this interesting business experience where you were
charging, what was it $15 or ...
Corrine:
Well, no, that was the raised price.
Rebecca:
Oh, really?
Corrine:
I was charging $5.95, $5 and 95 cents. Sometimes people like, "$595? How
cheap."
Corrine:
I'm like, "No. 5 decimal point 95."
Rebecca:
Right. That, and you went from there to now you make millions of dollars a
year.
Corrine:
Yes.
Rebecca:
I don't know what the current total is, I just know that you are one of the
highest earning coaches, that I had ever seen.
Corrine:
Well, we are the founder and so far only member of the eight figure club.
So, yeah.
Rebecca:
Wow, that's amazing. Tell us, that's an interesting story. How do you go
from thinking that, "Well, my services are worth $5.95 cents," to I assume
you have so many members now or what is it that has made you so successful
in that standpoint?
Corrine:
Well, I think for me, so one of the things that I learned, when I first
started, I was charging based on my self-worth and my self-worth was in the
toilet. I always tell people, "When you're thinking about what you're going
to charge, you do not want to be charging from your own self worth
perspective, unless you are A-gang baller in that department. You want to
think more about your client and the transformation you can give them. What
they need most." And so when I switched the mindset from thinking about
like, "Well, I'm only worth this much and who would want to pay me?" When I
dropped out of that and started really focusing on like, "Okay, my people
really need these things. I need to figure out how to get this to them and
it's worth this amount."
Corrine:
Basically what I decided was to no longer run my business personally. I was
going to run my business like a business and I was going to separate the
personal and work on that individually, but I wasn't going to wait until I
had my stuff in check before I started charging. I wasn't going to sit
there and model my way through figuring out my self worth and stuff and
then I'll start charging. I really had to just decide it's going to be
super hard and feel gross to charge more but I know at the end of the day,
if I'm not having self-worth issues, this is what people should be paying,
this is what they should be getting, and this is what the program should
look like. On this side, this is Corinne in her own work and she gets to do
that in the morning and she gets to do all that but the rest of the day,
we're going to be operating from a different mindset. I really had to quit
making my business so personal.
Corrine:
It took a long time to do that. I don't want somebody to hear me and think,
"Oh, did you just flip the switch?" No. I just went through as I grew
several times, I would figure out when I was making my business personal
instead of keeping it professional. I think it's one of the things that's
really important is when you're pricing really figure out, we all our
coaches do a fault download on your honest opinion as to why you're pricing
what you're pricing and look for the crappy thoughts that aren't going to
scale you, that aren't going to help you, that aren't going to help your
clients because that's what you want to be unearthing. You don't want to do
a thought download and not allow yourself to be honest with yourself.
That's what I did in the beginning was figuring out and I didn't even raise
my price that much, but I did go from, I have a membership.
Corrine:
I was not doing one-on-one coaching. I kind of started a little different
than most coaches.
Rebecca:
Mm, yeah.
Corrine:
I had one-on-ones for a while, I would say maybe about six months and it
just dawned on me really quick that women were talking about the same
things and they all felt so alone and isolated, and I wanted them together.
It made sense to me that we needed each other and it was going to save me
time and it was going to help them. I was already going into a group and
membership pretty quick, but I didn't make money at it for a long time. I
didn't think about just raising my prices on the one-on-one and stuff. I
was just like, "Oh, let's just put us together and still keep charging
almost no money and do those things." I think for me, it was just a matter
of really figuring out how to separate those two things.
Corrine:
Then I went from $5.95 to $15.95, and I will say it was one of the hardest
decisions. When I look back on my business, I think that that one move was
literally the most important and the hardest I ever made, because it was
for the first time I was going to charge based on what I knew in that
moment what the program was worth and I also knew that I had people that
were going to leave and I lost half my membership over $10.
Corrine:
Now, but when I did that, though, it kept me from just trying to please
what I had, who didn't really want what I was offering anyway, it was just
cheap. Then when I started raising my price, it really forced me to figure
out how to go get the people that I knew I could serve exquisitely. That
was a big decision, it was a hard decision, but it was the best decision
too.
Rebecca:
Yeah. I think that speaks somewhat to authenticity too. It's like, what do
we want to do in our business to serve people? Not what we think other
people want.
Corrine:
Right.
Rebecca:
Pricing according to what they want, we'd all be charging $10 or free. I
know so many people will come to me when I was a grief coach, which I'm not
a grief coach anymore, but I remember that was such a hard area to be in.
Everybody thought, "Well, grief coaching should be free." They're used to
getting a therapist with their insurance. That was just such a different,
and I remember thinking, "If I could help everybody, I would, however, how
can I be sustainable?"
Corrine:
Right.
Rebecca:
I feel like as coaches we need, how can we figure out how to make a
business sustainable? It needs to nurture us and it needs to nurture our
client. It needs to do all those things.
Corrine:
Yeah. Well, and this is my mindset. People, even to this day write in, now,
our prices are higher now. We do $289 to just join our membership and then
you pay $59 a month, so I finally got off that $15.95 brick too.
Rebecca:
That's still such a good deal.
Corrine:
It is an amazing deal. Oh my God. If anybody's on the inside, they're just
like, "Yes, that's an amazing deal."
Rebecca:
Yeah.
Corrine:
We are not just a weight loss membership. We are literally a life-changing
membership. My focus inside my membership is we're going to work on all the
crap that the diet industry doesn't even mention. They think your weight
supposed to solve it all. It's like, "No, we got to solve all these other
problems otherwise we're going to keep eating or we're going to think
eating is the thing." I knew for me when I lost weight, I had solved so
many of my self-worth issues. I wasn't finished, but I had solved this idea
that I was not good enough to do things. I had figured out that, "Well,
what if I'm just wrong about me? What if I just do little things?" It
unlocked everything for me.
Corrine:
Anyway, I just think that we have to just be thinking about the person
we're serving. When people say, "It should be free," people still come to
me and be like, "Oh, if you really want to help people you wouldn't
charge."
Corrine:
I'm like, "You got Google like the rest of us human beings. Don't tell me
that you can't Google information. If you want to self-develop, there's
plenty out there to self-develop on for free." That's why I have a podcast
and stuff. I'm like, "There's the free content." But there is a big portion
of people, way bigger than the people who complain and don't want to pay
for things, there's a bigger portion of people out there who are prepared
to change their life and are prepared to invest in it. They're tired of
Googling, they're tired of piecemealing and YouTubing and trying to find a
podcast and figure all their stuff out. I always think of myself as I'm the
shepherd, I'm the one who's supposed to make their transformation easier
because they're not having to figure it all out. They've got someone
guiding them and they've got someone motivating them. They have someone in
their ear and I want to go find those people.
Rebecca:
Yeah.
Corrine:
My job isn't to find the Googler or to listen to that person.
Rebecca:
Yeah, exactly. As coaches, our job is, I feel like it is to guide people.
It's to put that free quote, all that information and narrow it down to
here's the important things. Yeah, all of us. There's so much information,
it can be overwhelming. That's why people come to coaches. It's like, "I've
looked at all that information, I still don't get it. It's too much." They
get overwhelmed.
Corrine:
Yep.
Rebecca:
Perfect. You talked about self-judgment a little bit, that I think is one
of the issues I've gotten in my business where ... Here's something I
wanted to ask you about is do you think there's a formula for success or do
you think there's individual things about each person? Because there's so
many things I judge myself about when I was looking at people in Life Coach
School who were making all this money. I'm like, "Okay, do we have to
follow it that formula or is it just, there's individual things about each
of those people that really help them be successful?" What do you think
about that?
Corrine:
I think it's a hybrid. Let me say this. I think that there are frameworks.
It's just like weight loss. I teach a specific formula that's super basic
that anybody could do. I do the same thing when I coach business. I have an
advanced weight loss certification in there. I not only teach them how to
be a weight loss coach using a lot of my methodologies and stuff, but we
spend 50% of it on basic frameworks to get your business off the ground and
stuff. I think those things make things easier. I think it's nice when you
have some simplistic things that you can follow as a guideline, but there's
other skills that have to come into play that are common amongst successful
people.
Corrine:
I was just talking about this just a little bit ago. This helped me in
weight loss, and this helped me in business. It was the ability to not quit
anymore. I had to learn to quit quitting. When I learned that one skill,
then I could try all the frameworks. I could manipulate frameworks, I could
scale up frameworks, I could take some frameworks that people were telling
me were the simple ones and be like, "That's a no. That's not even simple
enough. Here's an even more simple version for us." When I got over the
idea that if it didn't work out, something was wrong with me and I took it
personally and I just decided, "Hey, the only way to fail technically is to
quit trying and give up on the idea of having a timeline, in weight loss
and in my business," I gave up a lot of the timelines.
Corrine:
We're scaling right now. We've had lots of growth and this year we're
scaling slower on purpose. I know I could grow probably twice as fast as
I'm growing right now. I looked at my husband earlier this year and we were
kind of just discussing things, I'd set this huge goal. I told him, I said,
"It doesn't feel right." I was like, "What is the rush?" I was like, "If
we're going to grow, I want to grow in a way that I can bring my people
along and it makes sense and that the long-term version of me loves how we
got there." Sometimes what we do in weight loss in business is we get so
desperate for the goal that we forget to pay attention to how we're getting
there. Then when we arrive, we've got a mess and then we don't even have
the goal to make us happy anymore.
Corrine:
I always tell people, "When you lose weight, you get super used to your
number real fast and then all of a sudden your brain goes back to, 'I doubt
you can keep it off. Did you notice no one said anything about your weight
loss today? I wonder if they're all just wondering if you're going to
regain weight.'" Your brain goes back to its default jerk behavior real
fast.
Rebecca:
Exactly.
Corrine:
Those goals never do make us happy because that's why I think it's so
important that you mind your mind and you mind your business as you go
along. You really got to like how you got there, because once you get
there, you really want to like what you did, because you're going to be
living with it for a long time.
Rebecca:
Truthfully and I have people who come to me who are coaches, who are so
burned out and some of them have done so much. They've made hundreds of
thousands a year and they're so burned out. It's like, "Well, then what's
the point? Why? Why did we set that goal and why did we go for it by
burning ourselves out? Because now guess what? You're flat on your back." I
literally have a coach who isn't able to do a whole lot right now because
she's recovering from such a burnout. Then I questioned that, what is the
point of that goal? How can we get there and again, sustainable way seems
to be something I talk about a lot. We want to reach our goal sustainably
and why are they important to us and how does it fit in your lifestyle? How
does it fit with your family and all the other things that you want to do?
It's not just about making money.
Corrine:
Right, it's also the language in which we drive ourselves with. For me, I
have a big capacity to work. I always have, when I was growing up, my first
job, I was 12. I've just always been somebody who was going to make the
money because my mom was single and we didn't have money, and so I knew
that if Corrine wanted anything from an order of French fries to a tank of
gas, Corrine had to go to work to get it. I have a great capacity to work,
but what has changed for me is how I talk to myself to get it done. I
always tell people when it comes to burnout, it's not always about what
you're doing, it's about how do you talk to yourself about it? Number one
is always like, "Well, tell me the purpose behind this. Give me a reason
why you're doing this. What is the reason behind this decision?" All this
other stuff. Get that shored up first.
Corrine:
Then the next thing is, is when we're ready to execute, most people who
burnout, do not know how to talk to themselves to get the job done without
beating themselves down, being terrified they're going to lose it,
terrified they can't do it. They're working through terror the entire time
and then they wonder why at the end of the day, they're like, "I don't know
what happened. I'm burned out."
Corrine:
It's like, "I don't know. You've been acting like you're in terrorist
training for the last year. You might want to watch that."
Rebecca:
Yeah. I call it sometimes there's this mistaken motivations. Why are you
doing this? What is the real purpose? If it's not feeling good to you, how
can you do a business that feels good to you? Not because Life Coach School
said you could make $100,000. None of that. What feels good for you? What
feels right for you? That's where my work is and I feel like sometimes
people miss that. We're just on the road of, "Hey, we have to get to
$100,000 as quickly as we can."
Rebecca:
It's like, "Well, that's not a great motivation. What is your real deep
..." You came from a background that's so different than so many other
people. There's a lot of things to recognize about successful people is
where did they come from? Why did they do? I think it's such a big part.
Why did you do what you did? We don't have the same way as you do. Our
journey's not going to be the same.
Corrine:
Exactly. One of the things that for me, the goal can only sustain you for
so long but once you hit the goal, if you don't have a bigger purpose, you
won't be able to keep it.
Corrine:
I was talking to somebody earlier, I listened to a lot of the coaches, "I
got to make 100K, want to make 100K," and stuff and they don't really
understand why they want to. Sometimes their reasons are crap. It's like,
"Well, because so-and-so is. Well, I don't want to look bad in front of
everyone else."
Corrine:
For me, making money in my business has never had anything to do with that.
It has always been so closely tied to I want a legacy for my family, I want
to change my family tree, I want enough money in the bank that my son who
has autism, that when I'm long gone, I know that that child is well taken
care of. I want to change other women's lives. For me, it's not just about
making the money, but the more women's lives I impact, I am making more
money, but it's about them.
Rebecca:
Yeah.
Corrine:
I don't feel bad about that, but it keeps me passionate because now I don't
need any more money. This literally sounds real crazy to someone who grew
up with not even eating every single day. We were so broke and I was broke
most of my life. You just come to a certain point where money no longer
becomes your motivation so you better have something else to motivate you
because if you don't, you'll blow it up. You'll be left with your habit
thinking, you'll be left with every broken thought that you've got in your
brain filling up your day and using that as your gas to get through. Most
people aren't going to make it if that's their only motivation. You got to
start thinking about who am I serving? Why am I serving them? Why is this
so important to me? Start thinking more about your greater sense and what's
going on there and you can have money goals on top of it, but you need to
have that stuff shored up if you want to be in it for the long haul.
Rebecca:
Yeah. There's definitely a core foundation that you need to build within
yourself, this core purpose. What's my work in the world? I love talking
with my coaches about that. What's your work? Why are you doing this?
What's your story too? So many of us, we go through the things we went
through, because for you, telling the story of how you didn't even eat
every day, that's super fascinating that now, how many percent of the
population of women actually make as much money as you do? I bet you, it's
a super ...
Corrine:
It's less than 2%. It's way less than 2%. I don't even know what it is, I
know that women in general, less than 2% ever will make over a million
dollars.
Rebecca:
Yes. Talking about your story of for some reason that had to come into your
life. You had to have this experience of not even eating every day and
somehow it drives you to make sure that your son who is autistic and I've
heard that story before too, it's super powerful to think about you showing
him how life can be. I think that's fantastic.
Corrine:
Well, thank you.
Rebecca:
I love hearing the comeback stories, transformation come back. Some of us
never grew up like that and in some ways I always think the more you had to
deal with in your life, I feel like it's the more motivation. It's just
feels that way. If you're born with a silver spoon, how do you be
motivated? Yeah, I don't know. [crosstalk 00:27:16]
Corrine:
Well, I don't know, but this is the way I think about it. I will say, I
think for most people it's not even motivating. I think for a lot of
people, it's an excuse generator. I have people in my life who kind of grew
up similarly to me that really struggle and they are just like, "But that's
the way I was brought up and nobody showed me anything and blah, blah,
blah."
Corrine:
I'm like, "Ditto. I get you." I just had to have a decision point in my
life where I had to no longer, I don't even use my past as a motivator. I
think for me, what it was was I first in phase one had to quit using my
past as my excuse, as my fact of why I am this way. When I got rid of all
that around weight and the business and money and things like that, then I
could, I don't even know if I use it as a motivation as much as I use it as
an opportunity to show myself that I have valuable lessons from that time
period that I get to apply now. Or I have so much in common with people
that I'm trying to help. I really want to help the underdogs. I really want
to help the people that ...
Corrine:
I always like to say, especially in weight loss is, "I'm the last stop on
the weight loss train." They have gotten off it, Weight Watchers and be
like, "Oh, it's a no," and they've gone to Noom and they're like, "Oh, they
don't really coach," and they've tried keto and they've tried all these
things. They just keep getting off the train and getting back on and I'm
the last stop. The train will not go any further. Once you get to no BS, it
is this simple, it really is just my mind. It's almost like you're either
going to lose weight or you're going to be like, "Crap. This is all on me
now." I give them the gift of knowing that it's all on you.
Corrine:
I gave myself that gift when I decided to lose my weight and I built my
business is I just told myself, "This is on you. This is your success to
make. This is your story to write. This is no one else's anymore," because
I have used everybody in my life as an excuse and I had just decided that
that's no more. If I have the responsibility, then I have the
responsibility and the opportunity that comes along with it. If somebody
else has the responsibility, then the opportunity is gone. I can't control
them. It's just important for me to jus, it's not just to show people that
you can overcome and that you can do those things, but just to really even
just help people get the path a little bit faster than what I had to go
through, you know?
Rebecca:
Yeah. I just feel like the most important lesson of everything you just
said is that our past doesn't tell us what our future has to be. In any
area of your life, losing a child, doesn't have to mean, I'm just thinking
of my past life where people would be like, "Well, I'm just going to be sad
now, forevermore."
Rebecca:
I'm like, "No." Any area of your life that you face hardship and you just
change the story, shift it and move forward.
Corrine:
Right.
Rebecca:
It really can be like that and it's hard for people who haven't been able
to do the work, but that's what work is about coaching. That's what the
coaching work is about. It's helping people to change that story that they
have that gives them the meaning of what they think is possible and just
blowing that up and creating something new. I love doing that with people.
Rebecca:
Corrine, this has been such a fascinating conversation. Tell us, what do
you have going on now? What do you want to tell my audience about how can
they reach you, about your work or what is it that you have going on now?
Corrine:
Well, there's two big things going on. One is if you simply just want help
with weight loss, you definitely can go to joinnobs.com. You can kind of
see what all that we do over there. If you want my free course, you can go
to no bs.club, you can get information about just my free course. We were
talking earlier about free and all this other stuff. I do offer resources
for free. One, eventually, I want you to work with me if it's possible for
you but at the end of the day, I did grow up broke. I had a single mama. I
tell people all the time the reason why I got so many podcasts and a free
course is so single mamas and people who don't have any money, they
actually can get some help and I do keep it simple over there for that
explicit purpose. But if you're just wanting to help with weight loss,
those are the best ways to get in touch with me.
Corrine:
But if you're an LCS coach through the Life Coach School and you happen to
be a weight loss coach, I'm opening up my final advanced certification of
this year, we won't do it again until summer of 2022. It's a three-month
program that really helps you find your voice as a weight loss coach. You
learn all the No BS stuff, you study my style of coaching, you refine your
voice as a coach, but you also really refine your voice as a thought
leader. We give you basic frameworks on the business side, you get access
to my team, we're going to have special calls where my content developer
comes, my Facebook ads person comes, my head coach comes to talk about how
we run one-on-one, we have a one-on-one program on the inside, so we're
going to really teach you frameworks that are simple around the business
back end of everything that you do so that you're becoming a thought leader
and a coach, but you're also really becoming a CEO and a business woman at
the same time business person, just in case any of the men are interested
out there. I've never done anything for men, so I would just like all men
to hear this. This is your opportunity to be a No BS woman, if you want to
be.
Corrine:
But you can go to theweightlossuniversity.com. There's a wait list, so if
you get on the wait list, then you'll get the application and the
information when we release it but that page is full of how the program
works, how it operates, what you can expect and all that kind of stuff. I
highly recommend anybody, if they're interested at all to get on that wait
list so that if we do any webinars or anything like that, you'll get access
to all of it.
Rebecca:
Oh my gosh, that sounds like an amazing opportunity for people, especially
if they're interested in weight loss coaching. Wow.
Corrine:
Yeah,.
Rebecca:
I want to say personally, Corrine is just the amazing mentor. I watched you
in the 100K coaching. I watched that over and over again for awhile too. I
have seen a lot of you mentoring people in business and it's just amazing,
so thank you so much. I just feel honored that you're on my podcast today.
Thank you. I really appreciate it.
Corrine:
I appreciate you being here and I love the mentoring part. The business is
my next big passion.
Rebecca:
Yeah.
Corrine:
I just feel like if I can help women get in the best health of their life
and get them some wealth and health, I'm just going to be like, "I'm going
to go to the grave thinking I did it all."
Rebecca:
You really have. Weight loss and money, two areas that women struggle with
I think. Amazing. Thank you so much, Corrine for being here and I hope to
see how happy everybody is being in your weight loss program, losing
hundreds of pounds. Aren't they supposed to lose 100 pounds?
Corrine:
Well, they don't have to. You can lose any amount of weight you want, from
10 on up.
Rebecca:
Oh, good.
Corrine:
But it is losing 100 weight. We specialize in those people who are just
like, I have done it all."
Rebecca:
Yeah. That's amazing. Thank you so much, Corinne.
Corrine:
You're welcome.
Rebecca:
Bye. If you enjoy listening to this podcast, please go subscribe so that
you get notified of all the future goodies that are coming along. While
you're there please leave me a review and let me know what you think. So
excited to share this with you and can't wait to talk to you next time.
Bye.